2005-2014

17 September 2009

Ugandan radio stations shut; debate programmes banned over clashes

The government-run Uganda Broadcasting Council effectively shut down four radio stations today and Thursday, and ordered all radio stations to halt political debate programming in the wake of violent clashes in the capital, Kampala, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Violence erupted after the government attempted to block the king of the Buganda ethnic group, Ronald Muwenda...

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17 September 2009

Thai media owner, editor handed prison sentences

A Thai criminal court decision has sentenced media owner, television commentator, and political activist Sondhi Limthongkul to two years in prison in connection with criminal libel charges filed by a former government minister. Sondhi posted 200,000 baht (US$5,882) bail and told courtroom reporters last thursday that he would appeal the conviction, according to local news reports. The court also...

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17 September 2009

Malaysian news website harassed over protest coverage

Official harassment of Malaysiakini, a widely read online news site in Malaysia that has faced persistent threats from government authorities over its 11-year history, has increased in recent times, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Officials from the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) entered Malaysiakini’s offices on September 8 and videotaped its...

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17 September 2009

Iraq shoe-throwing journalist flies off to Greece for medical treatment

The Iraqi journalist jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush has arrived in Greece following his release, Iraqi diplomats said Thursday, according to an Agence France-Presse (AFP) report. TV reporter Muntadhar al-Zaidi went to Greece for medical treatment after suffering torture while in prison, his family said. He was released on Tuesday after being jailed for one year...

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17 September 2009
Prosecutor wants jail for El Mundo journalist accused of "revealing state secrets"

Prosecutor wants jail for El Mundo journalist accused of "revealing state secrets"

A Madrid prosecutor on Monday demanded a three year prison term - and a three year ban on practising journalism - for El Mundo Deputy-Editor Antonio Rubio, who is accused of allegedly "discovering and revealing state secrets." The charges stem from articles published in the Spanish daily on May 31, 2005 detailing confidential reports which an informer codenamed 'Cartagena' supplied to the Spanish...

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16 September 2009

Freed Iraqi show-throwing journalist claims he was "tortured" in custody

The released Iraqi reporter who threw his shoes at former US President George W. Bush said Tuesday he was tortured during the first days of being in custody. "I have been tortured by electric shocks, beatings and whipped by cords," Muntadhar al-Zaidi, who was freed earlier in the day after nine months of imprisonment, told in the news conference at the TV station where he works in Baghdad's...

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11 September 2009

Turkish media group critical of PM Recep Erdogan fined €1.74 billion

Turkey’s tax ministry has imposed an unprecedented TL 3.75 billion, or €1.74 billion fine on a media group, Dogan Yayin, a conglomerate of newspapers and television stations that has been extremely critical of the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The huge penalty, handed down earlier this week following examinations of tax reports from 2005, 2006 and 2007, follows a €345 million fine against...

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11 September 2009

Journalist to take case to European Court of Human Rights

Finnish photojournalist Markus Pentikäinen, convicted in 2007 for ignoring a police order to stop reporting at the scene of a 2006 demonstration in Helsinki, is to take his case to the European Court of Human Rights, according to the International Press Institute (IPI. The move comes after a Finnish Supreme Court decision of September 1 which gave him "no leave to appeal," according to weekly...

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10 September 2009

Court rejects appeal against Slovenia gag order, IPI concerned at nature of injunction

A Ljubljana District Court has rejected Slovene daily Dnevnik's appeal against a temporary injunction that stops the paper reporting on an Italian businessman's alleged involvement in a corruption scandal, the International Press Institute (IPI) has reported. The injunction, which carries fines of up to €500,000 for failure to comply, relates to articles printed in Dnevnik on July 29 in which the...

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10 September 2009
Qaddafi celebrates 40 years of rule while media repression goes on

Qaddafi celebrates 40 years of rule while media repression goes on

As Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi held six days of lavish parties, plays, concerts and exhibitions to celebrate the bloodless coup that brought him to power on September 1, 1969, it was unlikely his international guests would have asked about Libya's abysmal press freedom record and all the journalists who have been disappeared, tortured or killed in the past 40 years. Libyans who are critical of

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